
	by Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya
	July 31, 2012
	from 
	GlobalResearch Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
			| 
	Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya is an 
	award-winning author and geopolitical analyst. He is the author of The 
	Globalization of NATO (Clarity Press) and a forthcoming book The War on 
	Libya and the Re-Colonization of Africa. He has also contributed to several 
	other books ranging from cultural critique to international relations.
	 
	He is a Sociologist and Research 
	Associate at the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG), a contributor 
	at the Strategic Cultural Foundation (SCF), Moscow, and a member of the 
	Scientific Committee of Geopolitica, Italy. He has also addressed the Middle 
	East and international relations issues on several TV news networks 
	including Al Jazeera, teleSUR, and Russia Today. His writings have been 
	translated into more than twenty languages.  
	In 2011 he was awarded the First 
	National Prize of the Mexican Press Club for his work in international 
	investigative journalism. | 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	There is much more to the conflict in Syria than meets the eye. Syria is 
	currently the scene of a cold war between the U.S., NATO, Israel, and the Gulf 
	Cooperation Council (GCC) on one side and Russia, China, Iran, and the 
	Resistance Bloc on the other hand. 
	
	
	 
	
	Amidst the fighting between the Syrian 
	government and anti-government forces, an intense intelligence war has also 
	been taking place.
	
	Germany’s foreign intelligence service, the Bundes Nachrichtendienst 
	(BND, Federal Intelligence Service), has been pointing its finger at 
	Al-Qaeda for the bombings in Syria. This, however, has the effect of hiding 
	and detracting the role that the intelligence services of the U.S. and its 
	allies have played. 
	
	 
	
	By crediting Al-Qaeda, the Bundes 
	Nachrichtendienst is helping get Washington and its allies off the hook. 
	Albeit Al-Qaeda is far more than just a U.S. intelligence asset, the 
	organization and label of Al-Qaeda is a catch-all term that is used to 
	camouflage the operations of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and other 
	affiliated intelligence services.
	
	Syrian intellectuals and scientists have also been reportedly assassinated 
	in Damascus. Like in Iraq and Iran, it is probably the work of Israel’s Mossad
	and part of Tel Aviv’s policy of crippling scientific and 
	technological advancement in enemy states. 
	
	 
	
	Informed sources in Washington have already 
	clarified that Israel is helping the Free Syrian Army and actively 
	participating in the intelligence war against Syria. An unnamed U.S. official 
	has confirmed to David Ignatius that both the CIA and Mossad are 
	involved in Syria. [1]
	
	 
	
	In his own words: 
	
		
		“Scores of Israeli intelligence officers are 
		also operating along Syria’s border, though they are keeping a low 
		profile.” [2] 
	
	
	A Qatari defector in Venezuela has also been 
	reported to have divulged that the Qataris have been outsourced intelligence 
	work against Syria by the CIA and Mossad.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	The Bombing of the 
	Syrian National Security Headquarters
	
	...and its Crisis Unit in Damascus
	
	There are still a lot of unanswered questions about the bombing of the 
	Syrian National Security Headquarters in the northwest Damascene 
	neighborhood of Al-Rawda on July 18, 2012. 
	
	 
	
	Very little is actually known about what 
	happened exactly. Moreover, Syrian television and media did not show scenes 
	of the explosion as people have become accustomed to. This may be due to the 
	security-based nature of the bombing location.
	
	Key members of Syria’s security and military command structure, Dawoud 
	Rajiha, Assef Shawkat, and Hassan Turkmani, were all killed on July 18. 
	Rajiha was the Syrian defence minister, deputy prime minister, and deputy 
	commander-in-chief of the Syrian Armed Forces. 
	
	 
	
	Assef Shawkat was the Syrian deputy defence 
	minister and the husband of Bashar Al-Assad’s older sister Bushra. Hassan Turkmani was the Syrian assistant vice-president, head of Syria’s crisis 
	management operations, and the army general that was formerly minister of 
	defence from 2004 to 2009. 
	
	 
	
	Hisham Ikhtiyar (Bakhtiar/Bakhtyar), the chief 
	of the Syrian National Security Bureau, who was also hurt by the bombing, 
	would also die from the injuries he sustained two days later on July 20. 
	These men all formed what was called the Crisis Unit.
	
	
	A moment should also be taken to note that the biographic background of 
	these dead high-ranking Syrian officials disproves the allegations that the 
	Syrian government is an Alawite regime. 
	
	 
	
	While Skawkat was an Alawite, Raijha was a Greek 
	Orthodox Christian, Ikhtiyar a Sunni Muslim, and Turkmani was both an ethnic 
	Turkoman and Sunni Muslim.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	The Killing of Crisis 
	Unit Members
	
	...was executed by a Foreign Intelligence Service
	
	Saudi sources have taken the opportunity to report that the Syrian officials 
	were killed by Maher Al-Assad, the commander of the Syrian Republican Guard 
	and President Al-Assad’s younger brother, because of a rift between them 
	that saw the general’s supporting a political solution over a combative 
	solution. [3] 
	
	 
	
	Pakistani sources, claiming to be receiving 
	direct reports from the perpetrators of the July 18 bombing, contradicted 
	the report by saying Maher Al-Assad was also a target and wounded during the 
	attack. [4] 
	
	 
	
	The Pakistani source published the following:
	
		
		“Everyone came in time, but Maher Al-Assad 
		did not show up. Two men responsible for the mission waited for some 
		time and pressed the remote control button as the dreaded general took 
		his seat,” the [Syrian Free Army] source said.
		
		“Our men filmed the video from a safe distance which would be made 
		public at an appropriate time,” he revealed to this correspondent [that 
		is, Naveed Ahmad]. One of the two daredevils was an employee of the 
		government and worked in the very office the device was planted while 
		the other was an outsider, according to the [Syrian Free Army] source.
		
		[…]
		
		The [Free Syrian Army] sources said Maher had brought his best friend 
		Ghassan Bilal to the meeting as well. Maher al-Assad, who was never seen 
		in the funeral of the key security aides assassinated in the attack, was 
		in fact severely injured and according to a source de-capacitated. 
		[5]
	
	
	What the Pakistani source discloses is 
	unreliable for several reasons. 
	
	 
	
	One of them is that the credibility of the Free 
	Syrian Army (FSA) is extremely questionable. The Free Syrian Army has an 
	undeniable track-record for shoddy propaganda and lying. Syria has also 
	rejected claims about the Free Syrian Army’s involvement and the assertions 
	that the bomb was remote-controlled. 
	
	 
	
	Lebanon’s Al-Manar, which is Hezbollah’s media 
	network, has reported that there were two bombs and the first was actually 
	dismantled by Assef Shawkat before the second one exploded.
	
	This was actually the second attempt to kill this gathering of Syrian 
	military, security, and intelligence officials. 
	
	 
	
	The out of control Free 
	Syrian Army, whose reign of terror has seen brutal and senseless attacks on 
	the civilian population and various acts of lawlessness and terrorism, had 
	claimed on May 20 to have murdered these same Syrian officials earlier, as 
	well as Interior Minister Mohammed Shaar and Baath Party leader Mohammad Saeed Bkheitan. [6] 
	
	 
	
	The claims of the Free Syrian Army turned out to 
	be false the first time as the alleged assassinated Syrian officials 
	appeared on television and denied the SFA’s claims. This time, however, 
	there was no immediate credit taken and there was silence about the murders.
	
	The Free Syrian Army was most probably bypassed by the U.S. and its allies for 
	this targeted attack.
	
	 
	
	Instead of outsourcing the attack to the Free 
	Syrian Army, the operation was probably directly conducted either by the 
	intelligence agency of a NATO or GCC state or a consortium of intelligence 
	agencies trying to topple the Syrian government.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	A Damascene Operation 
	Ajax
	
	The attack on the Syrian National Security Headquarters in Al-Rawda was a 
	carefully coordinated event that was synchronized with the assault on 
	Damascus by the various armed groups operating under the umbrella and banner 
	of the Free Syrian Army.
	
	 
	
	It is clear that the U.S. and its allies more or 
	less used the same playbook of tactics in Damascus that were used in 2011 to 
	topple the Jamahiriya government in Tripoli. Both are modern reincarnations 
	of the infamous 
	
	Operation Ajax, which was an intelligence operation launched 
	in 1953 by the U.S. and British governments to topple the democratic 
	government of Prime Minister Mohammed Mossageh in Iran. 
	
	 
	
	Washington and London installed a brutal and 
	repressive dictatorship under Mohammed-Reza Shah in place of Dr. Mossadegh’s 
	government and Iran was transformed from a constitutional monarchy into a de 
	facto absolute monarchy.
	
	The aim of the attack on high-ranking Syrian officials, especially important 
	figures from the military and security apparatus that has been the backbone 
	of the Syrian regime, was two-pronged. The attack’s aim was to cripple 
	Syria’s command structure with the objective of disorganizing resistance to 
	anti-government forces and creating internal panic within the hierarchy of 
	the Syrian government and military. 
	
	 
	
	This psychological blow was supposed to lead to 
	fear, defections, and betrayal as anti-government forces attacked the gates 
	of the Syrian capital.
	
	
	The mainstream media, in terms of what scholar 
	Edward Said called “image 
	making” experts, also played a supportive role in the U.S.-sponsored siege of 
	Damascus. [7] Securing a monopoly over information and air waves has also 
	been a part of the intelligence war and a goal of the U.S. and its allies. 
	This is why the signals of Syrian broadcasters have been banned from the 
	Arab Satellite Communications Organization (Arabsat) and Nilesat satellite 
	feeds. 
	
	 
	
	This is aimed at preventing Syria from 
	countering the claims of the U.S. and its allies and proxies. 
	
	 
	
	By the same token the U.S. and the EU are also 
	trying to cut and block Iranian stations, which are challenging the accounts 
	of the mainstream media in NATO and GCC states. This is also the reason why 
	the U.S. and British media very decidedly condemned the Iranian, Russian, and 
	Chinese medias in their news coverage of the Syrian crisis, which challenge 
	the tide of misinformation from the declining networks of CNN, Fox News, 
	France 24, and Al Jazeera. [8]
	
	Like the original Operation Ajax in 1953, in which the state-run British 
	Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) took part, the mainstream media broadcasts 
	from NATO and GCC states have been synchronized to shape the events on the 
	ground. 
	
	 
	
	The media war intensified when the 
	anti-government forces launched their attack of Damascus. The aim was to 
	fuel panic and fear with the hope of getting the Syrian government and the 
	Syrian military to scatter and lose hope instead of facing the 
	anti-government forces. 
	
	 
	
	The ultimate objectives are to demoralize the 
	Syrian population and to weaken the Syrian government’s domestic support.
	
	
	The media outlets of NATO and GCC states insinuated that President Assad and 
	his family fled Damascus to Latakia and would seek asylum in the Russian 
	Federation. [9] Again, the aims were to cause panic and both the 
	governments in Syria and Russia rejected the false claims. According to 
	Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Assad was “not even thinking about” 
	fleeing to Russia. [10] 
	
	 
	
	This was a repeat of British Foreign Secretary 
	William Hague’s 2011 lie that Muammar Qaddafi had fled from Libya to 
	Venezuela. [11] 
	
	 
	
	This behavior also falls into line with British 
	Prime Minister David Cameron’s false claim that Vladimir Putin had told him 
	that President Assad had to step down. [12]
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	A New Saudi 
	Intelligence Boss: Return of Prince “Bandar Bush”
	
	Shortly after the bombing of the Syrian National Security Headquarters, a 
	July 19 royal decree was enacted in Riyadh to replace Prince Muqrin (Mogren) 
	bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud with Prince Bandar bin Sultan Al-Saud as the 
	director-general of the external intelligence agency of the Kingdom of Saudi 
	Arabia, Al-Istikhbarat Al-Amah (General Intelligence).
	
	Since 2005, Prince Bandar has been the secretary-general of the Saudi 
	Arabian National Security Council, but his new appointment has made heads 
	turn and is being used to infer that Saudi Arabia has a far more aggressive 
	foreign policy. 
	
	 
	
	What the appointment reflects is that Saudi 
	Arabia is fully in the service of the U.S. in its intelligence wars against 
	Syria and Iran and that Washington’s men in Riyadh have a firm grip over 
	Saudi Arabia’s intelligence, security, and military apparatus. 
	
	 
	
	In the words of the Saudi pundit Jamal 
	Khashoggi and the chief of the Bahrain-based Al-Arab network:
	
		
		“Bandar is quite aggressive, not at all like 
		a typical cautious Saudi diplomat. If the aim is to bring Bashar down 
		quick and fast, he will have a free hand to do what he thinks 
		necessary.” [13]
	
	
	Prince Bandar, the son of the deceased Sultan 
	bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud, has been one of the central figures in creating 
	Al-Qaeda and manipulating militant groups as geo-political tools for 
	Washington since the Cold War. 
	
	 
	
	He was the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. from 1983 
	to 2005. He has been a key figure in the intelligence war in Lebanon against 
	Hezbollah and its allies and involved in exporting Fatah Al-Islam to Lebanon 
	in an attempt to help the Hariri family fight Hezbollah and the March 8 
	Alliance.
	
	Because he was the Saudi ambassador to Washington, he became the key figure 
	in Saudi-U.S. relations and developed close ties to 
	the 
	Bush family, which 
	earned him the name “Bandar Bush.” 
	
	 
	
	It has been reported that the relationship was 
	so close that the U.S. Secret Service was part of his security detail. 
	Moreover, he has had a long history with Robert Gates, starting from 
	when Gates was a member of the CIA and helping mobilize fighters in 
	Afghanistan against the Soviets. [14]
	
	In 2009, Bandar may have attempted to launch a silent coup in Saudi Arabia 
	to impose his father, Crown Prince Sultan, as the new absolute monarch of 
	Saudi Arabia. He was not seen for several years and may have been in some 
	form of confinement. Things changed, however, in 2011 with the Arab Spring; 
	Prince Bandar, Washington’s man, was seen in public again.
	
	Bandar may also be a key figure in Saudi negotiations with Pakistan to 
	purchase nuclear bombs. [15] 
	
	 
	
	United Press International writes:
	
		
		“As Iran becomes more dangerous and the 
		United States becomes more reluctant to engage in military missions 
		overseas, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia may find that renewed military and 
		nuclear cooperation is the best way to secure their interests,” observed 
		Christopher Clary and Mara E. Karlin, former [Pentagon] policy advisers 
		on South Asia and the Middle East. [16]
	
	
	The picture that UPI depicts actually is 
	misleading.
	
	 
	
	If anyone is pushing the Saudis to acquire 
	nuclear weapons, it is Washington. The U.S. has also been heavily arming the 
	Saudi regime and the GCC for the same reasons. 
	
	 
	
	One dimension of the U.S. strategy is clear: 
	
	
		
		Washington aims to create multiple and ongoing contained conflicts in the 
	Middle East to bleed the region and keep it immobilized. Like the Israelis, 
	the U.S. wants perpetual civil war in Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, and even 
	Turkey. 
	
	
	By being duped into burning its bridges with 
	Syria, the Turkish government has laid the foundations for the 
	destabilization of the Turkish republic. 
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	A Tale of Two Security 
	Headquarters
	
	Days after the appointment of Prince Bandar and the attack of the Syrian 
	Crisis Unit an attack on General Intelligence’s Headquarters in Riyadh was 
	reported by Yemen’s Al-Fajr Press and then widely quoted by the Iranian 
	media. 
	
	 
	
	The blast is reported to have killed Bandar’s 
	number two man, the deputy director-general of Saudi external intelligence, 
	while he was entering the building. Rumors are also circulating that Bandar 
	may have been hurt or killed. 
	
	 
	
	Saudi Arabia has remained silent over the issue.
	
	The blast in Riyadh is no mere coincidence. It is a retaliatory response to 
	the blast in the Syrian National Security Headquarters. The chances that the 
	Syrians executed the operation while all their energies are being spent on 
	fighting against the U.S.-directed siege on their country are marginal, but 
	still possible. 
	
	 
	
	This is speculation, but it is most likely that 
	one of Syria’s friends and allies retaliated against the Saudis for their 
	involvement in the attack on the Crisis Unit in Damascus.
	
	A remote-controlled bomb was also discovered in front of a Yemenese 
	Intelligence building in Aden on July 22, 2012. [17] 
	
	 
	
	The event came shortly after a Yemenese 
	intelligence officer died after a targeted attack in the province of Bayda. 
	[18] What this means is a matter of speculation, but what is clear is that 
	the intelligence apparatus of Arab states are being targeted. 
	
	 
	
	There is a full-out intelligence war in the 
	Middle East and there are probably cross-cutting alliances.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	The Bush Jr. Administration’s “Redirection” Policy 
	is...
	
	Manifest under Obama
	
	In Yemen, the national military has successfully been fractured and divided, 
	which is exactly what Washington, DC and its NATO and GCC allies want to 
	replicate in Syria. 
	
	 
	
	Regime change is not their only goal, the 
	destruction and balkanization of the Syrian Arab Republic is. They want 
	sectarianism and balkanization to take root in Syria and across the Middle 
	East.
	
	 
	
	To paraphrase, when the so-called spiritual 
	leaders of the Syrian Free Army and anti-government forces begin saying 
	that,
	
		
		“Israel and the Sunnis are allies against 
		the Shias” or that “all Alawites must be exterminated,” 
	
	
	...it is clear that the end goal is to 
	regionally divide and conquer the peoples of the Middle East by pitting them 
	against one another.
	
	This is part of the Middle East policy that the Bush Jr. White House called 
	the “redirection” in 2007: 
	
		
		“The ‘redirection,’ as some inside the White 
		House have called the new strategy, has brought the United States closer 
		to an open confrontation with Iran and, in parts of the region, 
		propelled it into a widening sectarian conflict between Shiite and Sunni 
		Muslims.” [19] 
	
	
	Robert Gates, Bandar’s old comrade, was brought 
	into the Pentagon to oversee this “redirection” and retained by 
	Barak Obama, 
	who’s “A New Beginning” Speech in Cairo is an extension of this policy.
	
	
	 
	
	The New Yorker is worth quoting about what the 
	“redirection” policy began to implement:
	
		
		“[Washington] has also taken part in 
		clandestine operations aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A by-product of 
		these activities has been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that 
		espouse a militant vision of Islam and are hostile to America and 
		sympathetic to Al Qaeda.” [20]
	
	
	Regardless of the political position that one 
	takes about President Assad and his government, what has to be emphasized is 
	that the governments of,
	
		
			- 
			
			the U.S. 
- 
			
			UK 
- 
			
			France 
- 
			
			Turkey 
- 
			
			Saudi Arabia 
- 
			
			Qatar, 
	
	...are not involving themselves under the cover of the so-called “international 
	community” on the basis of concern for the Syrian people and their well 
	being. 
	
	 
	
	Because of them the words “protester” and 
	“activist” have been hijacked by anti-government militias and foreign 
	intelligence services. Humanitarianism and human rights are not the motive 
	for U.S. involvement. This is a fairy-tale for the naïve. 
	
	 
	
	Geo-political opportunism is at play and all the 
	parties involved have blood on their hands at the expense of the Syrian 
	people.
	
 
	
	 
	
	
	NOTES
	
		
		1. David Ignatius, “Looking for a Syrian 
		endgame,” The Washington Post, July 18, 2012.
		2. Ibid.
		3. Ali Bluwi, “Role of Russia and Iran in Syrian crisis,” Arab News, 
		July 28, 2012.
		4. Naveed Ahmad, “Failing Damascus, Aleppo campaigns expose lack of 
		military expertise,” The News, July 27, 212.
		5. Ibid.
		6. “Syria: Damascus clashes prompt claims of high-level assassinations - 
		Sunday 20 May,” The Guardian, May 20, 2012.
		7. Edward W. Said, Orientalism, 25th anniversary ed. (NYC: Vintage 
		Books, 1979), p.307.
		8. “Chinese, Iranian press alone back UN Syria veto,” British 
		Broadcasting Corporation News, February 6, 2012; Robert Mackey, “Crisis 
		in Syria Looks Very Different on Satellite Channels Owned by Russia and 
		Iran,” The Lede (The New York Times), February 10, 2012.
		9. Damien McElroy, “Syria: Bashar al-Assad ‘flees to Latakia,’” The 
		Daily Telegraph, July 19, 2012; Khaled Yacoub Owei,” Syrian President 
		Assad in Latakia: opposition sources,” eds. Samia Nakhoul and Diana 
		Abdallah, Reuters, July 19, 2012; Loveday Morris, “Hunt for Assad is on 
		amid claims of wife Asma’s exit to Russia,” The Independent, July 20, 
		2012.
		10. “Russia says ‘not thinking about’ asylum for Assad,” Reuters, July 
		28, 2012.
		11. “Hague: some information Gaddafi on way to Venezuela,” Reuters, 
		February 21, 2011.
		12. “Putin no longer backs Syria’s Assad – Cameron,” Reuters, June 19, 
		2012; “Lavrov Denies Russia ‘Changed Stance’ on Syria,” Russian News and 
		Information Agency (RIA Novosti), June 21, 2012.
		13. Angus McDowall, “Saudi Prince Bandar: a flamboyant, hawkish spy 
		chief,” ed. Mark Heinrich, Reuters, July 20, 2012.
		14. In fact, one of the reasons that Robert Gates, who was the defence 
		secretary of the Bush Jr. Administration, was kept by the Obama 
		Administration is tied to Washington’s objectives to remobilize the 
		militant brigades against Arab societies.
		15. “Saudis ‘mull buying nukes from Pakistan,’” United Press 
		International, July 25, 2012.
		16. Ibid.
		17. Mohammed Mukhashaf and Rania El Gamal, “Yemen defuses bomb at Aden 
		intelligence building,” ed. Tim Pearce, Reuters, July 23, 2012.
		18. “Yemen intelligence officer shot dead: ministry,” Agence France-Presse, 
		July 21, 2012.
		19. Seymour Hersh, “The Redirection,” The New Yorker, vol. 83, no. 2 
		(March 5, 2007): p.54.
		20. Ibid.